THISDAY

Teachers Oppose Moves to Hand over Primary Education to Local Councils

- Solomon Elusoji

Teachers across the country have rejected the proposed hand over of the administra­tion of primary school education to local councils through constituti­onal amendment.

Delta State teachers, last week, took to the streets in Asaba to protest the move. The aggrieved teachers, led by the state Chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Mr. Jonathan Jemiriyigb­e, said that even with the joint allocation account committee, payment of teachers’ salaries was still not smooth and wondered what would be their fate should the payment be handed over fully to local councils.

Similarly, primary school teachers in Bayelsa State also took to the streets to protest against the move. The teachers, who also denied the claim that they were against the ongoing constituti­onal amendment on local council autonomy, want their salaries and other obligation­s to be handled by federal and state government­s.

The state’s Chairman, Mr. Kalama Tonpre and Principal Secretary, Nigerian Union of Teachers, Mr. Johnson Hector, said the local councils lacked the capacity to pay the teachers’ salaries, subvention­s and welfare packages. They lamented that they had been subjected to untold hardship by the local councils, which owed them various arrears of salaries.

The wave of protests also reached Oyo state, where members of the state’s NUT recently staged a peaceful protest against the move. They also said if local government autonomy was imperative for the federal and state government­s, payment of primary school teachers, funding and management of the schools should not be the responsibi­lity of the local councils. The rally, which took-off at the Agodi Secretaria­t of the NLC, was led by the state chairman, Niyi Akano and the state Trade Unions Congress (TUC) chairman, Waheed Olojede, to deliver their protest letter to Governor Abiola Ajimobi.

The placards carrying teachers argued that granting political, financial or administra­tive autonomy to the local government, would mean transferri­ng the management, equipping and funding of primary school education to the local government.

They said the burden would be too heavy for the third tier of government to bear. Some of the inscriptio­ns on the placards read: “Nigeria Union of Teachers, Oyo State Wing says no to local government’s autonomy”; “Basic education is a right of every child”; “Local government councils do not have the capacity to pay primary school teachers salaries”; “Foundation of education in Nigeria under threat again,” among others.

Akano said that the rally was not a protest against salary arrears but a fight for the soul of primary education in the state and the country at large. Olojede maintained that allowing the local government­s to take charge of the primary school education in the country was a good way of sending the sector back to the woods, saying that the teachers would not support local government autonomy in any way

Meanwhile, in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria, Ebonyi NUT chairman, Mr. Simon Ozo, also confirmed that the union was against the move. According to him, the union’s opposition to the planned handover of payment of teachers’ salaries to local government administra­tion is hinged on the Supreme Court decision, which granted payment of salary of primary school teachers to states.

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